Está en la página 1de 4

Improving Your Finances

Are Bonds Adding to Your Equity Exposure?


By Christine Benz | 03-21-12 | 06:00 AM | Email Article
These are trying times for yield-seekers. The Federal Reserve has kept interest
rates ultralow since late 2008, and chairman Ben Bernanke said earlier this year
that the Fed wasn't inclined to push up its benchmark interest rate until 2014.
That might be good news for those in the market for home loans, but it's surely
unwelcome for seniors and others trying to wring a livable income stream from
their portfolios. Yields on cash instruments such as certificates of deposit are barely
in the black, while you're lucky to pick up a yield of more than 3% on an
intermediate-term bond fund.
On the Hunt for Yield
Given that unyielding (sorry, couldn't resist) backdrop, it probably shouldn't be
surprising that some investors appear to be doing a little good old-fashioned yield-
chasing. Among bond funds, some of the biggest beneficiaries of new assets
during the past year have been those that offer higher yields than plain-vanilla,
high-quality bonds in exchange for some extra risk. High-yield bond funds have
picked up an estimated $17 billion in new money during the past year, while the
bank-loan and multisector bond categories have also enjoyed good takes, according
to recent Morningstar fund-flow data.
Of course, it's highly possible that investors are making the not unreasonable bet
that the economy will continue to improve, thereby boosting these credit-sensitive
sectors of the bond market. (Issuers are less likely to default on their bonds in a
strengthening economic environment, which in turn increases demand for their
bonds.) But it's also likely that some investors are focusing on the potential for
higher yields without paying due attention to the downside.
All market shocks are different, of course, but they're often characterized by a
flight to quality that puts pressure on credit-sensitive securities such as high-yield
bonds and bank loans. During the period from mid-2007 through December 2008,
for example, high-yield bond funds lost 29% cumulatively, on average, while the
typical bank-loan fund lost 31% during that same stretch. That sell-off precipitated
an unprecedented buying opportunity in credit-sensitive bonds, but following a
Print http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/HtmlTemplate/PrintArticle.htm?time=224127665
1 of 4 4/28/2014 10:43 PM
more than two-year runup in such securities, valuations aren't what they once
were. As Eric Jacobson discussed in this video, the yield differential, or
spread, between junk bonds and Treasury bonds is narrow relative to historic
norms.
Faux Diversification
In addition to considering the risks, investors who are venturing into credit-
sensitive bonds at this juncture should also be aware of what they might not be
getting: diversification, particularly if they're looking to bonds as an antidote to an
equity-heavy portfolio.
It's true that credit-sensitive sectors like high yield and bank loans are often
considered a good diversifier for portfolios that are skewed toward high-quality
fixed-income securities such as government bonds, mortgage-backed securities,
and high-quality corporate debt. During the past decade, the typical high-yield
fund in Morningstar's database has had a negative correlation with the Barclays
Capital Aggregate Bond Index, meaning that the two assets' performance patterns
have been substantially different. Ditto for the average bank-loan offering. The
(thoroughly addictive) website assetcorrelation.com corroborates those data in this
nifty table, showing that high yield is one of the only pockets of the bond market to
actually have a negative correlation with other bond-market sectors.
The high-yield sector's performance correlation with the equity market, by
contrast, is much stronger. During the past decade, high-yield bonds' correlation
with stocks has trended upward. Bank-loan fund returns haven't been nearly as
correlated with stocks, nor is their equity correlation trending upward.
Nonetheless, both high-yield bonds and bank loans are much more highly
correlated with the stock market than they are with bonds.
What Now?
Does that mean you should reflexively avoid high-yield and bank-loan funds? Not
necessarily. As noted earlier, the bonds do provide some diversification benefit to
high-quality bonds. Although high-yield bonds wouldn't be impervious in a period
of rising interest rates, as Eric Jacobson discussed in this video, their extra yield
cushions would most certainly hold them in better stead than gilt-edged Treasuries
in such an environment. Bank-loan funds also offer built-in protection against
rising interest rates, as Morningstar senior fund analyst Sarah Bush discusses in
this video. If the economy continues to strengthen, high yield and bank loans
would likely continue to chug along.
Print http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/HtmlTemplate/PrintArticle.htm?time=224127665
2 of 4 4/28/2014 10:43 PM
But it's also a mistake to assume that a bond is a bond is a bond. If you're looking
at mutual funds that delve into credit-sensitive sectors, it's crucial to thoroughly
understand a prospective holding's strategy and downside potential before adding it
to your portfolio. Morningstar's fund Analyst Reports do a good job of providing
an overview of these factors, and the Portfolio and Ratings & Risk tabs for
individual funds also help you dive into an investment's behavior and
characteristics.
To help investigate whether an investment would be additive or redundant with
something you already own, you can trial-run it in your portfolio by clicking the
"Add to Portfolio" button on Morningstar.com. (You must already have a portfolio
saved on the site to use this feature.) An even simpler stress test for a would-be
holding is to eyeball its return pattern in the highly disparate markets of 2008 and
2009. Muted losses during the bear market, combined with less-than-stellar gains
during the rebound, indicate that a fund will likely be a decent defensive holding,
whereas the opposite performance pattern would indicate equitylike characteristics.
A version of this article appeared May 2, 2011.
See More Articles by Christine Benz
30-Minute Money Solutions
Need help picking up the pieces in this turbulent
market? 30-Minute Money Solutions by Morningstar
director of personal finance Christine Benz simplifies
the daunting task of getting your financial house in
order. Written for novice and experienced investors
alike, this book offers manageable, step-by-step
solutions for tackling money challenges and building a
comprehensive financial plan in simple 30-minute
increments. Learn more.
Order Your Copy Today--$16.95

Christine Benz is Morningstar's director of personal finance and author of 30-Minute Money
Print http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/HtmlTemplate/PrintArticle.htm?time=224127665
3 of 4 4/28/2014 10:43 PM
Solutions: A Step-by-Step Guide to Managing Your Finances and the Morningstar Guide to Mutual
Funds: 5-Star Strategies for Success. Follow Christine on Twitter: @christine_benz and on
Facebook.
Print http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/HtmlTemplate/PrintArticle.htm?time=224127665
4 of 4 4/28/2014 10:43 PM

También podría gustarte